Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. High School Students Who Suffered In Silence Now Helping Others

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2018 12:32 PM
    VANCOUVER — At his lowest point in Grade 10, Joshua Ramos would walk the streets of his neighbourhood at midnight wearing headphones and wish for the music to drown out the dark thoughts that followed him everywhere.
     
    At school, Ramos could barely make the effort to talk to anyone. Besides, he didn't have the words to describe the hopelessness that kept him silent.
     
    "As soon as school was over I'd go home as fast as possible, go to my room and go to sleep," Ramos said, recalling the sinking feeling for which he had no name.
     
    "I felt it was really draining to talk to other people and just be happy all the time," he said of increasingly isolating himself from parents, friends and teachers.
     
    He'd banish thoughts of speaking to a counsellor at David Thompson Secondary School by telling himself he'd just be wasting someone's time, that his experience was "not really that serious."
     
    Stephanie Barrantes, now also in Grade 12 at the same school, began fighting the demons in her mind when she was in Grade 8 by telling herself she was having a bad day — nearly every day.
     
    "I would be walking to school and I would feel really overwhelmed and I would start crying so I wouldn't even go to school. When I was at school I would act as if my friends did something wrong but it was really me being scared. I was just mad at them and I didn't know why," she said.
     
    Like Ramos, Barrantes was too afraid to talk about what they both would learn is called depression.
     
    They also suffered from anxiety, and Barrantes had panic attacks, too.
     
    Ramos finally opened up to a friend when the midnight walks became so routine that he knew something wasn't right. Barrantes confided to her mother after shrugging off questions and spoke to a school counsellor before seeking counselling outside of school.
     
    Ramos and Barrantes now speak about mental health to Grade 7 students at elementary schools near their own school as part of a pilot project called Here 4 Peers, with training provided by a Vancouver Police Department facilitator.
     
    Ashley Currie, a former youth worker, said she has trained about 70 students at three high schools in public speaking about depression, suicide and related topics.
     
    The plan for the project, based on information from the Canadian Mental Health Association, is to expand training to every high school in the city over five years.
     
    "A huge piece is that a lot of this depends on a really strong and dedicated adult mentor at the school," Currie said of the program funded by the Vancouver Police Foundation.
     
    A school counsellor who Barrantes turned to for help takes on that task at David Thompson.
     
    Barrantes said the training has helped her shed the shame of her depression.
     
    "When people come to me and tell me, 'I don't know what's happening,' I say, 'It's OK, I've had it, too. I understand you.' "
     
    Last week, she and Ramos also spoke at a youth-led mental health conference that attracted 250 students and educators from 18 schools in Vancouver.
     
    Three other gatherings, as part of a BC Children's Hospital initiative called Building Our Minds, have been held across the province, with funding from the Canucks for Kids Fund. A fifth conference was scheduled for Monday in Sechelt.
     
    Fardous Hosseiny, national director of research and public policy at the Canadian Mental Health Association, said a national plan requiring all students to learn about mental health is needed to remove the stigma around issues such as depression, which is so prevalent among youth.
     
    "Why don't we have education programs in schools to teach people about their emotions, their feelings, to understand what mental health is?"
     
    He said that while some provinces provide limited mental-health education, they need to develop mandatory courses.
     
    In British Columbia, mental health became a component of the physical and health education curriculum last year, but only for kindergarten to Grade 9 students.
     
    The Education Ministry said the program will be expanded to Grades 10 to 12 starting next year.
     
    Treatment wait times for children dealing with mental-health issues are longer than for adults, Hosseiny said, adding kids often reach a crisis point by the time they're assessed, with suicide a particular risk for those suffering in silence.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Parties Promise Jobs, Public Investments At Dawn Of B.C. Election Campaign

    Parties Promise Jobs, Public Investments At Dawn Of B.C. Election Campaign
    VANCOUVER — British Columbians have faced an onslaught of government announcements, party ads and political finger pointing over the last few months.

    Parties Promise Jobs, Public Investments At Dawn Of B.C. Election Campaign

    Maldivian Model Raudha Athif's Father Accuses Kashmiri Friend Of Her Murde

    Maldivian Model Raudha Athif's Father Accuses Kashmiri Friend Of Her Murde
    Muhammad Atif, father of Raudha Atif, lodged a case with the court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate on Monday afternoon accusing her daughter's classmate Sirat Parveen Mahmud, 21, who hails from Kashmir

    Maldivian Model Raudha Athif's Father Accuses Kashmiri Friend Of Her Murde

    Coach Put Troublemaking Teen John Horgan On Track To B.C.'s New Democrat Leader

    Coach Put Troublemaking Teen John Horgan On Track To B.C.'s New Democrat Leader
    VANCOUVER — As a teenager, John Horgan was as far away from becoming a political leader in British Columbia as you could get.

    Coach Put Troublemaking Teen John Horgan On Track To B.C.'s New Democrat Leader

    Sister Of Wrongly Fired Health Worker Harshly Critical Of B.C.'s Christy Clark

    VICTORIA — The sister of a B.C. government health worker who took his own life after being falsely accused of wrongdoing calls Premier Christy Clark's response to a report on the issue callous and cynical.

    Sister Of Wrongly Fired Health Worker Harshly Critical Of B.C.'s Christy Clark

    Man Charged After Honda Civic Clocked At 200 Km/h Crashes Off N.S. Highway

    Man Charged After Honda Civic Clocked At 200 Km/h Crashes Off N.S. Highway
      Mounties say the car was spotted late Sunday afternoon on Highway 104 in Marshy Hope, passing vehicles at high speed in a no-passing zone.

    Man Charged After Honda Civic Clocked At 200 Km/h Crashes Off N.S. Highway

    Mountie Rescues Infant From Car Seat After Vehicle Hits Watery Ditch

    Mountie Rescues Infant From Car Seat After Vehicle Hits Watery Ditch
    PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. — A woman is facing impaired driving charges in Manitoba after a vehicle rolled into a watery ditch and trapped a toddler in his car seat.

    Mountie Rescues Infant From Car Seat After Vehicle Hits Watery Ditch